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231
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11 mo. ago

  • Then he should definitely know better and know why what he’s doing will ruin any chance he has of rapid certification.

    Asking naively: In what way would this self-experiment have bearing on later trials done by other parties?

    Setting aside the dangers of self-experimentation, there’s a host of issues ranging from the individual psychological (doctors are as vulnerable to sunk-cost fallacy as anyone) to broader problems of replication issues (publishing one-off successes/failures can lead to misinformation regarding the viability of a given therapy).

    IMO the main issue I saw in this case was administering to family members, to put my cards on the table, but I think given the risk profile, it was acceptable in context if they were well-informed and had an epipen handy.

    All research involves risk, and a key pillar of bioethics is the requirement of informed consent. Generally speaking, no one is better informed than a principal investigator to give that consent, and no one has better-aligned incentives to ensure safety.

    I also think any doing serious biomed research is well-educated enough to understand standards of evidence and treat small-N case studies for what they are.

    Ginseng, Garlic, St. John’s Wort, and Acai Berries underwent the same fad promotions.

    This is going too far in my book; wishful thinking is the problem here, not self-experimentation in a clinical context. I agree these supplements are overhyped, but do you really think we should be barring people from trying out garlic and reporting what they experience?

    The ethical issue in the case of grifter supplements is trying to financially profit from a contrived narrative, not the inherent process of trying things on a small scale and reporting those findings.

  • But self-experimentation is a huge taboo in bio-ethics for a litany of reasons. If this guy was a proper professional, he’d know that.

    He’s a professional virologist with the NIH.

    Speaking from my own professional lens, I think the consensus around self-experimentation in biomed is way less black and white than you’re making it out to be. E.g., Dr. Barry Marshall famously won a nobel prize for self administering H. Pylori.

    What are your particular scruples in this case, if you don’t mind me asking?

  • It’s a bit wandering, but this piece has great insight on the whole and explains the motivations behind a lot of abstract modern tooling.

    As a grugbrained/anti-complexity type of designer, I was pleased that the author did such a good job aligning their arguments so that they were equally relevant to single-node hegemonic deployments just as much as Web-Scale (TM) microservice soup.

  • That’s my question too: Why ignore the focus of the peer-reviewed research to latch onto a political talking point about how this isn’t significant because it impacts so few people?

  • You’re talking about the incidence rate as a way of downplaying the importance of the research, when the research is interesting specifically because they were able to identify such a highly specific mechanism that only happens in such rare circumstances.

    The incidence rate isn’t a focus of the article, so why else is that what you’re lasering at if not to make a statement?

  • This paper is immunology research, not a political message. You don’t need to drag this in here.

  • I understand why people are downvoting, but identifying and explaining these misfires in somatic hypermutation is actually really novel and interesting work.

    Somatic hypermutation and its role in common autoimmune diseases is something I desperately wish would make its way into popular knowledge. I think the name makes people think the concept is way more difficult than it really is.

  • I can absolutely see that making sense for a targeted attack.

    Are there bootkits in the wild that can reliably bootstrap to a rootkit on most non-Windows hosts these days? The hard part of that approach would be having a bootkit payload sophisticated enough to escalate to a meaningful form of exfiltration, I imagine.

  • Genuine curiosity: What kind of hardware bug would you go for if you wanted to spy on a relatively easy target like a Thinkpad from ten years ago, and had 1-2 hours to install it?

    My naive guess would be intercepting the monitor cable to pull occasional screencaps, but then you’d need a wireless modem to transmit out and you’d have pretty serious limitations on power draw (assuming you’re running off a cell battery and not splicing in somewhere).

  • might catch hardware backdoor on the border

    Say whatever you will about the CCP: there’s nobody on earth burning the level of resources needed to do that undetectably and reliably on some tourist pleb’s arbitrary hardware.

    More power to you if that’s what you wanna spend energy on, though.

  • Completely depends on what your threat model is, but personally:

    I'd make an encrypted image of my drives, upload that to remote storage, zero out the drives for border crossing, then restore over the wire on the other side.

  • It’s absolutely one of the strongest applications of LLMs right now.

    Very interested to see how things develop long-term though, since theoretically we should start seeing red team tools developed that can close the holes an attacker would be hunting. Granted, I think we’ll need at least another five years for true high-quality pentest agents, and offense will have the upper hand in the cat & mouse until then.

  • Why do we pretend like it’s necessary to have a CIA as part of the U.S. government? Between the nepotism and complete lack of public accountability they justify by claiming it’s necessary to “protect America,” they might as well just be a private corporation.

    It really seems like the entire purpose of the agency is just to help rich people in the U.S. do fucked up shit at home and around the globe to destroy democracy in the name of “spreading democracy.”

    There’s a book I love called The Very Best Men by Evan Thomas that shares this thesis. The author is a well-regarded Washington journalist and insider who was given access to the CIA’s archives.

    He starts off by playing the title straight, humanizing his main subjects, explaining their ideological motives and justifications, and playing up their esteemed credentials and education. Then he goes into the practical effects of their actions and shows that in practice, they were terrible people who pumped out a steady stream of incompetent gaffes, own-goals, and international crimes.

    There’s a very similar vibe to the Epstein files: The shadowy kabbalic figures were, in the cold light of day, grade A morons and it’s a miracle they had any success covering their tracks at all.

  • The other common trap you might be hitting is trying to turn them too early.

    Once most foods (but potatoes especially) sear properly, they’ll release their hold on the pan and you won’t lose the skins/outer layer quite as easily.

  • It’s the opposite: Most people are likely downvoting because Hancock-esque arguments aren’t worth addressing.

    This is remedial choir-preaching.

  • I run Debian stable for all the reasons you describe.

    My experience is that you occasionally have to peek at the wiki to get things set up right initially, but after that, you’re set for many years.

    My daily driver is a bookworm install from 2021, and I’ll be running it until EOL. Zero issues with gaming; shit just works.

  • QEMU on full system mode is a decent option if you’re not looking for a daily driver.

  • looks inside

    Linux

  • It’s just a meme site that was posted to HN and took off.

    No investors or purpose beyond putting a pool of chatbots together and watching the slop proliferate.

  • History @lemmy.world

    Dan Carlin’s Mania for Subjugation III Released (Alexander the Great series)

    dancarlin.substack.com /p/mania-for-subjugation-iii-now-available
  • Mycology @mander.xyz

    Found my first wild edibles this summer in Vermont

  • Gardening @lemmy.world

    Lemon Balm — Underrated?

    en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lemon_balm
  • The Eternal Playlist @crazypeople.online

    A.A.L. - Flash In The Pan

  • cats @lemmy.world

    Sibling Personality Pic

  • Gardening @lemmy.world

    Late April Garden

    imgur.com /a/cdVymtf
  • Gardening @lemmy.world

    PSA: You can grow hot peppers as perennials

    imgur.com /a/oRscqpu